DIY Life Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. National Broadcasting Services of Thailand - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/National_Broadcasting...

    NBT TV. NBT TV (or NBT (Digital) 2 HD), formerly TVT11, is the television division and free-to-air channel of NBT. The broadcasting of TVT11 began on 11 July 1988, when TV9 (currently known as Modernine TV) split into two channels. It was firstly aimed at viewers in the countryside. Some elements such as sex and violence are censored as NBT is ...

  3. National Broadcasting and Telecommunications Commission

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/National_Broadcasting_and...

    The 2007 constitution instead called for the creation of a single regulatory agency, and the new Act on Organization to Assign Radio Frequency and to Regulate the Broadcasting and Telecommunication Services, B.E. 2553 was passed in 2010. The first 11-member commission of the NBTC, to serve under terms of six years, was appointed in September ...

  4. Censorship in Thailand - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Censorship_in_Thailand

    The National Telecommunications Commission as a temporary regulator/licensor of CR and CTV in Thailand proposed a draft "provisional license" for CR and CTV in May 2009. During June, an NTC subcommittee on broadcasting went around Thailand to "pre-register" prospective CR operators with the expectation that when the regulation becomes effective ...

  5. List of prosecuted lèse majesté cases in Thailand - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_prosecuted_lèse...

    Sold VCDs containing a segment of the Australian Broadcasting Corporation Foreign Correspondent series. [23] Australian foreign correspondent Eric Campbell and ABC's entire Bangkok bureau had been banned from entering Thailand after they aired an investigation of Bhumibol's role in the military's violent 2010 crackdown on protesters. May 2012

  6. 2014 Thai coup d'état - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2014_Thai_coup_d'état

    None. On 22 May 2014, the Royal Thai Armed Forces, led by Prayut Chan-o-cha, the commander-in-chief of the Royal Thai Army, launched a coup d'état, the twelfth since the country's first coup in 1932, [ 1 ] against the caretaker government following six months of political crisis. [ 1 ] The military established a junta called the National ...

  7. Mass media in Thailand - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mass_media_in_Thailand

    Mass media in Thailand. Thailand has a well-developed mass media sector, especially by Southeast Asian standards. The Thai government and the military have long exercised considerable control, especially over radio and TV stations. During the governments of Thaksin Shinawatra [1] and the subsequent military-run administration after the 2006 ...

  8. Thai Public Broadcasting Service - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thai_Public_Broadcasting...

    Thai PBS tested its broadcast by connecting to a temporary signal for broadcasting to the special programs chart which had been appropriated by Television of Thailand (TVT or TV 11 Thailand) at TVT New Phetchaburi Road Broadcasting Station. (presently National News Bureau of Thailand headquarters and NBT World TV Station and formerly UHF ...

  9. People's Alliance for Democracy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/People's_Alliance_for...

    During the 2008 political crisis, armed masked PAD forces broke into the government-owned National Broadcasting Service of Thailand and seized control of the television station. The television broadcast of the morning news program briefly showed pictures of PAD forces breaking into the gates of the station before blacking out for several hours.